Category: News

  • Are intelligent tires in your future?

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    The last decade has been a boon for technologies like traction and stability control, but the tire itself has remained relatively low tech. Schrader Electronics is reportedly looking to change that equation with a “smart tire” that could be production ready within three years. The electronics company already knows a thing or two about tires, as a self-proclaimed global pioneer of the Tire Pressure Monitoring Systems that stabilize today’s trucks and crossovers.

    Schrader claims that its Smart Tire tech utilizes sensors on the tire itself that wirelessly transmits data to receivers in the wheel housing and is routed to the vehicle’s ECU sensor. Schrader is working with Pirelli to bring its new tire tech to market starting in 2010. The first tire, called ‘Cyber Tyre Lean,” will transmit pressure, temperature, average load and the number of revolutions.

    The company claims that the fully-integrated “Cyber Tyre” will transmit information on “tread depth, pressure and temperature, along with the shape of its footprint and the amount of load it is under, will be combined with precise readings of road conditions to optimize control of the vehicle’s dynamics.” Schrader expects to offer the Cyber Tyre by 2013. Hit the jump to read over the Schrader Electronics press release.

    Continue reading Are intelligent tires in your future?

    Are intelligent tires in your future? originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 29 Apr 2010 08:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Daniel Tisch Earns Glennan Fellowship

    tischclass.jpg

    Daniel Tisch in the classroom

    The academic fields and disciplines of the 2009-2010 Glennan Fellows vary as widely as the projects in which they are engaged.

    Awarded each spring, Glennan Fellowships are administered by the University Center for Innovation in Teaching and Education (UCITE) and designed to reward excellence in faculty and to nurture their growth as teachers and scholars. Each Glennan Fellow has been awarded $6,500 to be used toward their projects.

    The Daily will continue to feature each of the award recipients. Today, learn about Daniel Tisch‘s project.

    Daniel Tisch, assistant professor, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Center for Global Health and Diseases

    Project: ” A Model Global Health Course: Disease surveillance in real-time”

    Tisch created a course focusing on a trans-cultural, trans-disciplinary multimedia learning experience in the field of global health. Faculty and students from both Case Western Reserve University and the Federal University of Bahia, Brazil, used the information communication technology Adobe Connect® to create a single classroom between multiple institutions for instruction, analysis and interpersonal communication.

    Collaboration with the Bahian health department, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Florida Department of Health permitted the analysis of historical and real-time data from the annual dengue endemics and sporadic epidemics in the Brazil, Puerto Rico, and Florida. “The goal is to prepare undergraduate, graduate, medical and other students for the field of global health,” Tisch wrote in his grant proposal.

    Tisch said the web-based international experience is transformative for students who are unsure of global health career opportunities or who may have been otherwise unable to travel to a foreign site for learning and academic projects. An unexpected outcome of the course has been an invitation to present the project results to Brazilian health departments in May.

    The class will use this opportunity to view the Dengue transmission sites, meet their international peers and gain additional applied epidemiological training. The course served as a model learning program in epidemiology and global health that can be expanded to other existing and new university partnerships.

  • Huge solar eruption caught by SDO! | Bad Astronomy

    On April 19, 2010, NASA’s newly-launched Solar Dynamics Observatory caught a massive eruption on the Sun, called a prominence, as it blasted millions of tons of 60,000 K (100,000° F) gas off the surface of the Sun. Check out this amazing footage as the material blows upward, then rains back down onto the Sun’s surface.


    Holy Haleakala! If you watch carefully, you can see little hot spots flash as the gas hits the Sun again. At about 31 seconds, a thin streamer comes screaming back down; look carefully where it hits and you’ll see those spots. This animation is actually about four hours worth of images strung together.

    Note the scale of this scene: it shows a region about 100,000 km (60,000 miles) across! The Earth would easily fit under the arch of this rising gas.

    Oh– before you ask, that dark hair-like thing is a piece of dust or some other detritus in the SDO camera. That’s aggravating, but I’m hoping the engineers will figure out a way of getting rid of it or at least minimizing its influence.

    Prominences like this have been seen for decades, but never in this much detail. And even though SDO has only been flying for a few weeks, it’s already solved one mystery: why the rain of gas moves more slowly than expected as it rains back down. You can’t see it in this video (but you can on this page about SDO) but there is a layer of much hotter gas near the surface of the Sun. This gas, at about 1,000,000 Kelvin (1.7 million° F) cushions the fall of the rain, slowing it down. SDO’s high resolution and ability to measure the temperature of the gas allows astronomers to understand this phenomenon for the first time.

    SDO is extremely cool, and will be providing solar astronomers with more data than they can possibly handle for decades. But that’s good! It’s always nice to have more data than less. The Sun is fiendishly complex and difficult to understand in detail, so SDO will be an incredibly useful tool to help astronomers figure out what’s what.

    After all: there not be anything new under the Sun, but there are always new ways of looking at it.

    Credit: SDO/AIA


  • Building on tradition

    For the first time in more than three centuries, a Native American home stands in Harvard Yard.

    Over three days, a group of Harvard students built a traditional Wampanoag home, called a wetu, near the site of Harvard’s Indian College, one of the first buildings on campus, constructed to house students from nearby tribes.

    The structure, of a size that might have housed a small family, was built of traditional materials: long, thin poles lashed together with long strips of bark and sheathed in larger rectangular bark squares. It was left unfinished on one side to let passersby view its interior.

    Kelsey Leonard, a senior and member of Long Island’s Shinnecock tribe, said the project was conceived as a way to commemorate the 360th anniversary of Harvard’s 1650 charter, which dedicated the institution to the education of English and Indian youth alike.

    In addition, Leonard said, the project was also intended to commemorate the Indian College, built in 1655, the foundation of which was uncovered last fall by an archaeology class digging in the Yard.

    Leonard was joined by other members of the student group Native Americans at Harvard College in the effort. She said the work, which included stripping bark from the thin poles, was sometimes tedious, but “therapeutic.” The students labored in shifts, trading off tasks as they left to attend class.

    College administrators and officials at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, who took a lead role in the Yard dig that unearthed the Indian College’s foundation, said that though they handled some of the logistical necessities, the project was largely student conceived and run.

    Leonard said that Harvard’s first Native American students were part of a cultural exchange between the English settlers and the local tribes as the two groups sought to understand each other better.

    “We wanted to find a way to continue that exchange, so we’re building the first wetu in Harvard Yard,” Leonard said. “It’s been a very good experience, very positive.”

    The wetu will stand in the Yard through Arts First weekend and be dismantled on May 3.

    Tiffany Smalley, a junior and Aquinnah Wampanoag who co-directed the project with Leonard, said during the wetu’s opening ceremony April 22 that the project has made her optimistic about the future of Native Americans at Harvard and helped her understand a little more about her own native culture.

    “Personally, I’m learning more and more how to honor my ancestors and how to honor [specific] spaces,” Smalley said.

    The wetu was constructed with help from the Aquinnah Wampanoag of Gay Head, based on Martha’s Vineyard. Tribal council member Jonathan Perry directed the construction, providing traditional materials.

    Perry, who has worked on constructing traditional structures like wetus and dugout canoes for several years, said traditional wetus varied widely in size. The largest could stretch 200 feet and be 40 feet wide. Building them was typically a community effort, done by men. But women owned the structures in their matrilinear culture, with a man moving to a woman’s wetu after marriage, Perry said. The frame was typically constructed of cedar saplings, which are insect- and rot-resistant and considered a sacred wood. The floor was white sand. The thick outer bark sheathing of the structure was typically taken from chestnut and elm trees — giants of the New England forest that today have been devastated by disease. For the Yard’s wetu, Perry provided bark from poplar trees.

    Because native people moved with the seasons, families often owned two homes, Perry said. Because they spent most of their time outdoors, homes were relatively small, providing protected space for sleeping and shelter from harsh weather.

    To honor those people, students began construction with a ceremony acknowledging the native people who lived there.

    The wetu “is significant because of the fact that this place for thousands and thousands of years was home to many native people,” Perry said.

    Home stretch

    Home stretch

    Mike Veino ’13 (left) and Tommy Miller ’11 help Jonathan Perry (center) construct a traditional Wampanoag home, called a “wetu,” in Harvard Yard.

    Knifework

    Knifework

    Tiffany Smalley ’11 assists with materials for the wetu. Poles were lashed together with long strips of bark and sheathed in larger rectangular bark squares.

    Tree house

    Tree house

    Aquinnah Wampanoag tribe member Elizabeth Perry helps fashion the inside walls of the wetu, which are made from thick panels of bark.

    Hatchet job

    Hatchet job

    Tommy Miller ’11 tools around with the foundational poles for the wetu.

    Ties that bind

    Ties that bind

    Here, cedar bark is peeled and moistened before it’s used to fasten the the wetu together.

    Welcome home

    Welcome home

    The wetu is open for passersby to check out its interior. It will remain on display through May 3.

    Photo slideshow: Building a wetu

    Kris Snibbe/Harvard Staff Photographer

  • Reino Unido recebe nova viatura Jaguar XF

    Imagens da nova viatura britânica

    A cidade de West Midlands no Reino Unido recebeu uma nova parceira na luta contra o crime nas ruas: Unidades adaptadas para a polícia do Jaguar XF. O que é comum na Europa é a adaptação de supercarros e esportivos para ações policiais, devido ao seu desempenho.

    O Jaguar XF versão policial possui um motor de 271 cv a diesel, e por enquanto apenas sete unidades desse carro estão servindo a lei. Visualmente, o carro pode parecer um pouco “estranho” com a sua pintura chamativa (acho que essa é a intenção, se é para ser uma viatura), em cores em verde fluorescete e azul, lembrando muito as cores de uma de nossas operadoras de telefonia mais odiadas do país.

    Curiosamente, carros da Jaguar eram muito usados em filmes policiais dos anos 50 a 70, mas pelos bandidos como carro de fuga. Agora eles fazem parte de um grupo onde veículos como Range Rovers, Vauxhall Omegas e Toyota Lands participam na luta contra o crime.

    Imagens da nova viatura britânica
    Imagens da nova viatura britânicaImagens da nova viatura britânicaImagens da nova viatura britânicaImagens da nova viatura britânicaImagens da nova viatura britânicaImagens da nova viatura britânica

    Via | Auto Guide


  • Exclusive: NewWorld Capital Set To Announce First Investments

    We learn that cleantech-focused private equity fund, NewWorld Capital Group, launched last fall by former Mckinsey and Company Director Carter Bales, is close to announcing a series of inaugural investments.

    The investments are club deals directly supported by the firm’s founding partners as well as a couple of outside investors and would support at least two companies in the energy efficiency space, an industry source tells G.E.R.

    Our source says the investments in the two energy efficiency companies, which he declined to name,  have not been finalized but are expected to be north of $50 million.

    New York-based New World Capital is also considering investing in two companies in the waste management and water treatment space.

    NewWorld still plans to raise an initial $100 million fund  but which, as we’ve reported, could grow to $500 million depending on investor appetite. The money will support companies in the clean energy and energy efficiency space as well as  companies involved in waste management environmental services and water.

    The fund is not looking to invest in startups but in companies that have revenues, proven products and clients.

    At McKinsey Bales founded the firm’s environmental practice. He launched NewWorld Capital last fall with Bradley Abelow, former chief of staff to New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine and a Goldman Sachs veteran; Bill Hallisey, who joined from GSC Group; Ali Iz, who came from CMEA Capital and Everett Smith, who was a managing director with New Energy Capital.

  • United States to lead the way for bio-fuel

    POET_Biorefining_plant.jpg
    Looks like President Obama is taking the whole green thing seriously. Every effort is being made on his part to save the environment and have the United States go green. His latest was a visit to Missouri, the first ethanol plant. The President stated that U.S. should be No.1 in bio-fuels.

    The President is hard up on decreasing dependency on foreign oils, which is why these steps are being taken. In a little corn-filled barn, the President addressed a 200 member strong audience, stating that use of home grown fuels was a key strategy. He also wished for U.S. to be the first in the world of bio-fuels and lead the way before China and other nations. America is sure seeing a bright green future.

    [Kansascity]

  • Panama to seek Noriega extradition from France

    [JURIST] Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli said Wednesday that his government will seek the extradition of former military leader Manuel Noriega, currently being held in France on money laundering charges. Noriega faces charges of human rights violations in Panama for crimes allegedly committed during his 1981-1989 rule. He was convicted on three counts of human rights violations in absentia, and each count carries a 20-year prison sentence. Panama’s Vice President and Foreign Affairs Minister Juan Carlos Varela said Wednesday that his office will write to the judicial branch, which must make the extradition request.
    Earlier this week, a French judge ruled that Noriega must remain in custody until his trial. Noriega arrived in France Tuesday morning after being extradited from the US, where he had served a 17-year sentence on drug charges. He had fought extradition from the US since 2007. Last month, the US Supreme Court declined to reconsider Noriega’s petition to stop the extradition process. His lawyers filed the petition in February after the Supreme Court denied certiorari on the case in January. Noriega, who has been declared a prisoner of war, sought to enforce a provision of the Geneva Convention that requires repatriation at the end of confinement. Noriega and his wife were sentenced in absentia to 10 years in jail by a French court in 1999, but France agreed to hold a new trial if he was extradited.

  • Wind turbines of the Cape Cod coast in the United States

    Wind_turbines_of_the_Cape_Cod.jpg
    What better place exists than the middle of the ocean for a good breeze, strong enough too turn the blades of a wind turbine. And that’s exactly what the Obama administration realized while approving the offshore project, Cape Wind. This is just one of the projects that will line up around the Atlantic coast.

    At a cost of around $1 billion, 130 wind turbines will be hoisted off the Cape Cod coast. The project will produce enough energy with the help of the wind to power up 75 percent of the electricity demand of the Cape and islands nearby like Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard. Like always, every rose has a few thorns, and these are being pointed out by local opponents who claim that a project like this would disrupt marine environment. A handful of European countries are already using power sources like these with few complaints. U.S. has a lot of catching up to do.

    [Gris]

  • Enemy Lurks in Briefings on Afghan War – PowerPoint – NYTimes.com

    WASHINGTON — Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the leader of American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, was shown a PowerPoint slide in Kabul last summer that was meant to portray the complexity of American military strategy, but looked more like a bowl of spaghetti.

    “When we understand that slide, we’ll have won the war,” General McChrystal dryly remarked, one of his advisers recalled, as the room erupted in laughter.

    The slide has since bounced around the Internet as an example of a military tool that has spun out of control. Like an insurgency, PowerPoint has crept into the daily lives of military commanders and reached the level of near obsession. The amount of time expended on PowerPoint, the Microsoft presentation program of computer-generated charts, graphs and bullet points, has made it a running joke in the Pentagon and in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    “PowerPoint makes us stupid,” Gen. James N. Mattis of the Marine Corps, the Joint Forces commander, said this month at a military conference in North Carolina. (He spoke without PowerPoint.) Brig. Gen. H. R. McMaster, who banned PowerPoint presentations when he led the successful effort to secure the northern Iraqi city of Tal Afar in 2005, followed up at the same conference by likening PowerPoint to an internal threat.

    “It’s dangerous because it can create the illusion of understanding and the illusion of control,” General McMaster said in a telephone interview afterward. “Some problems in the world are not bullet-izable.”

    via Enemy Lurks in Briefings on Afghan War – PowerPoint – NYTimes.com.

  • AIG may be overvalued but catalysts could provide upside

    American International Group Inc. (AIG) may be overvalued at US$40 per share based an updated sum-of-the-parts analysis that reflected recent developments by Andrew Kligerman at UBS. The analyst arrived at a fair value of US$31 based on changes in insurance sector multiples, pending sales of AIGs Asian unit (AIA) and its Alico foreign life insurance business, as well as other revisions.

    However, Mr. Kligerman feels there are several potential catalysts that could provide upside to his valuation, including a restructuring of the government’s equity stake at favourable terms for AIG common shareholders. While the analyst does not think this is a highly probable outcome, multiple expansion in the life insurance or property and casualty space would boost the value of AIG’s insurance operations and the equity-linked securities received from selling Alico and AIA.

    “Current management has been disciplined in its asset sales, optimizing returns on asset disposals (not seen in the prior leadership),” Mr. Kligerman said in a research note. “Abating credit losses and successful debt offerings by subs suggest less reliance on the Fed Credit Facility.”

    In addition to the sum-of-the-parts analysis that signals potential downside risk, the analyst also warned that AIG shares could see significant earnings per share and return on equity erosion if the non-cumulative series E/F preferreds were replaced by common shares or cumulative public preferreds.

    “AIG’s earnings power will be materially weaker (post the sales of key foreign life subsidiaries) and there are some concerns around the adequacy of its P&C loss reserves,” he added.

    Jonathan Ratner

  • United States sniffs something bad in the air

    unclean_air.jpg
    Air pollution isn’t something we can ignore anymore. Did you know that six in ten Americans live in places with dangerous levels of air pollution? That’s around 175 million people in America. Currently, Los Angeles has the worst ozone pollution. Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale area of Arizona has the worst year-round particle pollution while Bakersfield, California has the worst short term particle pollution.

    A report based on 2006 to 2008 claimed that cleaner diesel engines and controlled coal-fired power plants has led to a decrease in pollution though around 30 million people still live in highly polluted areas. These pollution levels can lead to diseases like asthma, lung damage and premature death. Fargo, N.D., Wahpeton, N.D., and Lincoln, Neb. are currently the cleanest cities in the United States. You should probably consider moving there for some cleaner air.

    [Physorg]

  • Unruly Democracy: What Is Wrong (or Right) With Science Blogs? | The Intersection

    On Friday at our Harvard Kennedy School event, I’m going to be giving my rather pessimistic take–already laid out in Unscientific America, and only amplified by “ClimateGate” and other events since then–on the science blogosphere. I’ll talk about how in comparison with the old media, the Internet fragments and narrows the audience for science information, even as there aren’t really any norms for responsible conduct–and thus, misinformation, innuendo, and general nastiness abound. I’m sure, however, that others will have a different view. Perhaps Joe Romm will; he has just joined our roster for the event. Certainly, his blog has been a major success and demonstrates many of the upsides of science blogging. Such debate is all to the good; it’s why we’re having the event in the first place. Indeed, I myself will point out some clear positives when it comes to blogging about science (I’m sure you can guess many of them). But taken as a whole, are blogs broadening the conversation about science by reaching new audiences, replacing what has been lost in terms of science coverage in the old media, or elevating our general science discourse? I have to say, I’m skeptical. There is no going back from this new world, but …

  • HP Buys Palm: What Should Happen

    The tech world was taken by surprise by the news that computer giant HP had initiated a purchase of beleaguered Palm for $1.2 billion. Palm has been in trouble for a while, and had been actively shopping for a buyer to bail them out. A few companies had been mentioned in the press as interested in Palm, but no one gave HP a thought. The merger of HP and Palm is probably the best possible scenario for Palm, and it will be fun to watch the process. HP has the resources to make the most of Palm’s technology, and experience at taking over innovative companies (remember Compaq?). Here’s what I think will happen with the merger, along with my thoughts on what better happen to make this work.

    HP is in a unique position to take advantage of the Palm takeover. It is in the phone business, but not really. HP was big in the PDA segment for years, but never made a successful transition into the smartphone age. There are good people in this area with HP, but they’ve never been allowed to innovate. The absorption of Palm into the HP Personal Systems Group will be an infusion of talent and know-how that HP can leverage immediately.

    That is first and foremost what the new HP/Palm team must do — release a new webOS phone that blows Palm’s past phones out of the water. Take HP’s great skill at producing top-notch hardware, and pair it with webOS to make a smartphone that will take the segment by storm. I have no doubt it can be done, and it must be done quickly to create the buzz needed to make people watch HP’s phones going forward. Make a webOS phone with hardware that rivals anything in the Android segment. Prove that webOS, coupled with outstanding hardware, is the best smartphone platform available.

    HP must focus on the Palm/webOS effort in its phone business after the merger is complete. Drop Windows Phone 7 and work solely with webOS; no dilution of effort in the phone business. Palm’s OS is as good as anything on the market, so take it and run with it. Continue to innovate and grow the OS with the help of the Palm team. Send a clear message to the smartphone community and market that this is your product.

    Throw a lot of resources into the Palm developer community. This is crucial to the success of the platform, and HP has the muscle and money to make it a vital part of the equation. Get developers to embrace the platform, no matter what it takes. Bring back those developers who have dropped webOS due to Palm’s problems. Make this a priority within HP and the phone group. Throw a boatload of money at developers if you must, it is crucial to the future of the platform.

    Drop the Palm brand. This is not something I say lightly, I am nostalgic about Palm and the brand. But I believe it is vital that HP send a clear message to the industry that it is behind the webOS platform 100%. A clear way to do that is to bring it into the HP branding scheme, and quickly. Go all in with Palm by bringing it totally into the HP family. On every front it is important to send a clear message — Palm is HP now, and we are going to run with it.

    Produce a webOS tablet that rivals the iPad. I firmly believe the webOS platform is a good one for such a product, and HP’s expertise in making mobile computers can be leveraged to full advantage in such a device. This will create a new product line that has amazing potential for HP, and all of the pieces are already in place with the merger to make this happen. HP can still go with the HP Slate, although that is just a netbook without a keyboard. What will be better is a thinner, lighter tablet with a mobile OS. That will truly compete with the iPad.

    An HP tablet with webOS opens up the possibility for an ecosystem that can take on the Apple/iTunes/App Store. HP has the clout and expertise to use the webOS phone and slate lines to add apps, music and video to the mix in such a way that eventually HP can take on Cupertino.

    The merger of Palm and HP will not be without cost cutting, and that means losing good people. It is inevitable given the high price paid for Palm. HP must do this intelligently, and without hampering the Palm team too severely. Make the combined team work well together after the merger. The priority should be fast release of new products that make a difference.

  • The polluting facts of mobile phones

    environmental_impact_of_cell_phones2.jpg
    Just because your cell phone doesn’t and give out CO2, it doesn’t mean that your phone doesn’t indirectly cause a whole lot of pollution. Think again! Here’s an infographic that tells you just how polluting that Blackberry or iPhone in your pocket could be. Here’s a reality check on how mobile phones can actually pollute.

    61% of the world’s population uses a cell phone. That’s around 4.1 billion mobile phones. These phones use around 4,221 mega joules of energy, equivalent to 32 gallons of gas emitting 112 kilograms of CO2. If every charger was left plugged in the whole day, it would waste enough energy to power up 28,000 homes. And to top it all, 140,000,000 cell phones will land up in landfills this year. That’s about 4 phones per second. Recycling all these phones would save enough power to light up 272,000 homes. About time we switch to good old pigeons for communicating.

    Via – [Newlaunches]

  • “Glee: The Power Of Madonna” Album Tops Billboard 200

    Madonna just sent the cast of Glee soaring to the top of the charts.

    Glee took the number one spot on the charts this week with the its popular Madge-themed compilation album, The Power of Madonna, moving almost 100K copies last week.

    Over 13.5 million viewers tuned in to watch the FOX series pay musical tribute to The Queen of Pop on an episode which aired April 20.

  • Lexus details hybrid two wheeler concept

    Lexus Hybrid Bicycle Concept

    Lexus has announced details of the innovative Hybrid Bicycle Concept we first spied tucked away at last year’s Tokyo Motor Show. Headed for a UK debut at the Great British Bike Ride this weekend, the full-carbon fiber frame hybrid (electric+human) concept includes a 240W electric motor at the front hub, eight-speed transmission, a 25.9V Lithium-ion battery and regenerative braking. Head on through for more images plus our video overview…
    Continue Reading Lexus details hybrid two wheeler concept

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  • Kindle Gets Facebook After Your Grandparents Did [Kindle]

    Hey, kids… have you heard of this Facebook thing that’s been hitting the internet? Amazon did! And they’re integrating it, along with some newfangled Twitter thing, in their Kindle 2.5 software update—along with some other, less-belated goodies. More »







  • Get Energy from Your Shoe!

    A fun new technology that harvests power from a small generator embedded in the sole of your shoe has been developed by Dr. Ville Kaajakari at Louisiana Tech University (LTU).

    The technology cannot power your house (yet), but it can be used for a range of useful purposes.

    (more…)

  • Amazon Patents Selling Used Goods At Starbucks, Barnes & Noble Or Other Locations

    theodp writes “Having already been burned by Amazon’s 1-Click patent, one imagines Barnes & Noble will be fuming to learn that the USPTO granted Amazon a patent Tuesday covering the use of Barnes and Noble’s physical stores to fulfill orders placed for used goods on Amazon. The e-tailer was awarded U.S. Patent No. 7,702,545 for its System and Method for Facilitating Exchanges Between Buyers and Sellers, legal-speak for arranging a place to meet to exchange cash for used goods ordered online. From the patent: ‘In an exemplary embodiment, buyers and sellers are permitted to designate exchange locations in the system 100. An exchange location may be a location that the user regularly visits. For example, users may designate locations such as health clubs, schools, coffee shops, book stores, and so on, as acceptable exchange locations.’”

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